Taiwan wargames against China attack

Hsinchu (Taiwan) (AFP) – Taiwan on Thursday staged a live-fire anti-landing drill simulating an invasion by China as President Ma Ying-jeou pledged to maintain a battle-ready force while seeking peace with the island’s giant neighbour.

The exercise, presided over by Ma, was part of this year’s annual military wargames codenamed “Han Kuang 31” (Han Glory) designed to test how Taiwan’s armed forces would repel an attack from China.

“Although cross-Strait ties are the most stable over the past 66 years, the Republic of China (Taiwan) has by no means slackened its military preparedness,” Ma told around 800 servicemen involved in the drill at a gathering in a military base in the northern Hsinchu county.

According to a report Taiwan’s defense ministry sent to parliament last month, the People’s Liberation Army have increased the number of ballistic and cruise missiles targeting the democratic island.

Thursday’s wargame simulated a response to a Chinese invasion in which a fleet of enemy ships approached a harbour close to Hsinchu Science-based Industrial Park, the island’s answer to the Silicon Valley in the United States.

“The drill was very successful. My heart is full of confidence that we are able to defend our national security,” Ma said at the miliary base on a hill overlooking the Taiwan Straits.

Television footage showed jet fighters releasing flares, attack helicopters launching rockets and marines landing from amphibious vessels in another live-fire exercise also held in the south on Thursday.

The ongoing series of drills also took place earlier this week in Kinmen, a Taiwan-controlled outlying island group near China’s southeast Xiamen city.